Hello MARMAMers!

Please join us in New Zealand at the SMM Biennial for the following half-day 
workshop on Dec 8. We look forward to seeing you there!

Cheers,
Leslie

Integrating Marine Mammal Conservation: Human Dimensions and the Practitioner

Date: 8 Sun. Afternoon Only
Duration: Half Day
Cost: $25 stud mem, $50 mem, $50 stud nonmem, $75 non mem
Organizer: Leslie Cornick
Organizer email: [email protected]

Description: == Note: This workshop was previously titled "Integrating marine 
mammal conservation: 21st century challenges" == Marine mammal conservation is 
unique because many species are difficult to study due to their pelagic nature, 
resulting in significant data gaps. All marine mammals are protected in the US 
under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, and some species have additional 
protection under the Endangered Species Act. However, few species exist only in 
the US, so conservation plans often must include international cooperation, 
including First Nations tribes. Marine mammals also frequently interact with 
industry via competition, by-catch, and critical habitat designation. Many 
marine mammal species are consumed by subsistence users, and internationally 
through commercial and scientific whaling exemptions to the IWC. Thus, marine 
mammal conservation must take a multidisciplinary approach (oceanography, 
fisheries biology), and integrate priorities of diverse stakeho!
 lders (policy makers, industry, subsistence users). This workshop will present 
the summaries from presentations at the 2013 ICCB symposium that brought 
together stakeholders in fisheries, indigenous food security, biology, and 
policy to consider challenges, solutions, and best practices for advancing an 
integrated approach to marine mammal conservation. A significant outcome of the 
ICCB symposium was the need for marine mammal biologists and practitioners to 
understand the human dimensions and implications of their work for local 
communities. This symposium will include key human dimensions training for 
biologists and conservation practitioners. The final symposium in this 
three-part series will occur at the Third International Marine Conservation 
Congress in 2014.



************************************************************
Leslie A. Cornick, Ph.D.
Department Chair, Environmental Science
Professor, Marine Biology
Alaska Pacific University
[email protected]
907-232-3112

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